California State Controller John Chiang offers this daily tax tracker to follow personal income taxes, sales and use taxes and corporate taxes -- the three major sources of revenue for the State.

The site will be updated regularly throughout each business day. Preliminary posts use dollar figures from tax administration agencies, while the following day the Controller will post reconciled (actual cash) figures. The latest figures are always available via direct download. Preliminary sales tax figures, along with personal income tax withholdings will be available by 10:30 a.m., followed by total personal income and corporate tax receipts, along with final sales tax numbers between 1:30 and 4:00 p.m. the same business day.

The chart on the right of this screen tracks the cumulative total of income, sales and corporate tax and compares it against estimated benchmarks for the month.

Wednesday, April 2, 2014

Corporate is up


Corporate tax revenues for April continue to surge ahead, with the net total for the month already at $77.4 million.  This is $18.1 million above the first two weekdays of April last year.  Total net revenues for the month from the three main sources ended today at just over $861 million, also up from the same period last year at nearly $265 million.  The strong start for April’s revenue continues to be on track to meet or exceed the projected revenues for the month.

The April Watch is On

All eyes will be on daily revenue counts as the critical tax season begins.  The first day of the month may have been a little disappointing. The total revenue take was $71.4 million, a number which was substantially down from the figure initially reported.   Retail sales for April 2 remained on the soggy side.  However, corporate tax payments remain strong and personal income tax receipts are also likely to be solid.  Final figures for March showed a strong performance for both.
 
Roughly two-thirds of the General Fund derives from Personal Income Tax levies.  By the middle of this month, taxpayers will have filed their income tax forms for the year ending December 31, 2013.  When all the returns are opened and processed, budget writers will sift and test the data to see what the 2013 tax returns tell them about what to expect in 2014.  What they find will shape how they estimate 2013-14 and 2014-15 revenue estimates.

 

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

Tax Season Begins

Although some taxpayers can procrastinate, April has started with a sizable inflow.  Personal income taxes net of refunds totaled $458 million on April 1.  This number included money received during the weekend and Monday’s Cesar Chavez holiday.  Adding in a small amount of corporate taxes and retail tax receipts, the total of California’s three major resources clocked in at $513 million.  One-half billion dollars is a good start to reaching the state’s forecast goal of about $13 billion for April as a whole.

What a difference a day makes…  Final payments on the corporate tax are due on March 15, so each year there is a flurry of payment and processing activity at the Franchise Tax Board immediately after the Ides of March.  This year, over 50 percent of all the March collections for this tax were reported on just two days—March 16 and 17.  This pattern is persistent, with small variations.  For example in 2013, a similar percentage of all collections were reported on March 17 and 18.  We will see a similar flurry of activity for individuals around the middle of this month as April 15 appears.

April 1

California consumers provided the state’s tax coffers with a slow inflow of receipts for the first day of April.  Preliminary numbers show that sales tax receipts, which reflected sales for both the weekend and Monday (government offices were closed for the Cesar Chavez Holiday), totaled $10.3 million.  This was less than half, or $12.7 below estimates for the day.
 
The state’s revenue estimators monitor historical and current revenue trends throughout the year and update their revenue estimates formally three times a year.  To make each update they rely on recent tax and economic activity to fine-tune their estimates for the current- and budget-year.  The May Revision changes, due on or before May 14 of each year, tend to be the most significant. 

March Goes Out Like a Lion

California’s tax receipts ended March more like a lion than a lamb, surpassing the $6 billion mark and beating both last year’s numbers and the projected total for this year by wide margins.

Totaling $6.1 billion, tax revenues from the state’s main three sources (personal income, corporate income, and sales tax) were nearly $400 million above estimates made for March earlier this year as part of the Governor’s Budget.  The number was close to $600 million higher than the total generated by the economy a year ago.  This year’s performance reflects the recovery in California’s economy and the strong gains in stock prices and home values.  Notably, all three major California sources joined in outperforming this year’s estimates and the year-ago figures.

April 2014 tax reporting not only helps budget writers monitor actual receipts for the 2013 tax year, it informs their thinking about the likely taxpayer behavior in 2014 and helps model likely tax receipts in April 2015.  For example, it tells them something about the likely tax base: More than 60 percent of all income tax collections are derived from wages and salaries.  If the 2013 tax returns show an increase in the wage and salary base, it is likely that the increase will continue in 2014.   

Friday, March 28, 2014

Tax Receipts on a Winning Streak


March madness is ending with revenues flowing into state coffers at a good pace.  Based on preliminary estimates through March 28, tax receipts from California’s three major revenue sources have totaled $5.8 billion, exceeding estimates for the total month by over $100 million.  This will represent the close for the month because of the upcoming weekend and the Cesar Chavez State Holiday on Monday.  The March number could be revised significantly when released on Tuesday after any corrections are made and auditing is completed.  Looking at the fiscal year-to-date, numbers through March show that total revenues are ahead of Budget projections by about $1.3 billion or 2.2%.  This is a nice margin to have if it lasts.

Budget projections are difficult to make.  Keep in mind that current projections contained in the Governor’s new budget presented early this year were based on actual data that was already available for about half the fiscal year.   When the focus shifts to Fiscal Year 2014-15, with the release of the May Revision of the Budget, revenue numbers will solely reflect projections.

How precise are General Fund revenue estimates?  Given the range of variables that affect revenues—including the economy, the weather, and changes in federal law or taxpayer behavior—the estimating error can easily rise.  One study found that if the estimators could control for variations in the economy, the estimating error would hover around 5.0 percent.   The consequences for this built-in error rate can have a big effect on budget planning, deficits, and the health of the General Fund. 

By way of comparison, the 2013 American League batting champion, Miguel Cabrera, got on base 1.7 percent more often than did the National League’s champion, Michael Cuddyer.  If budget projections could be limited to just that much difference between estimates and actuals, even then the revenue swing would be nearly $2 billion.  A $2 billion “windfall” is a happy, healthy gain.  A $2 billion “shortfall” can have immediate and long-term consequences to many programs supported by the General Fund.

Retail Sales Perk Up


After lagging behind projections during most of March, retail sales may be picking up as the month comes to an end.  During the last two days (March 27 and 28), month-to-date totals have exceeded forecasts.  With weekend sales still to be tallied, tax receipts are at 99.8% of the target for the month as a whole.

Sales tax receipts during the past week are also running well ahead of a year ago.  This is impressive since Easter fell at the end of March last year (March 31) but will not occur this year until the latter part of this April (April 20).

The Tax Tracker reports revenue collected from the corporate, sales and personal income taxes, irrespective of into which account the revenue is deposited.  For example, the proceeds of a surcharge on high-income taxpayers is earmarked for mental health services.   Because a piece of the income and sales taxes are earmarked for specific programs, the general progress of annual collections are as important to those who monitor these programs as well as it is to those watching the health of the General Fund.